A Description of Texas Its Advantages And Resources With Some Account of Their

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) At the upper edge of this black, limy belt, which is gener ally about six hundred feet high, is found the mountains which connect with the lower cross-timbers of northern Texas, and constitute the terminus and base of a vast, undulating and often rugged, plain, ascending rapidly towards a common center to the "Staked Plain, " situated partly in north-western Texas, and partly in New Mexico, about four thousand feet high (which is above the average height of the Alleghany ledge of mountains). ...It is, indeed, but a high, broad table land, connected with the Rocky Mountains, with its southern verge in the shape of rocky cliffs resting on the plain below, which are called mountains. The cross-timbers (as they are called, ) are two parallel belts of post-oaks and other trees, each from fifteen to twenty miles wide, and about twenty-five miles apart, growing on a sandy soil, running nearly south from the Red River to the Brazos River, where they are joined to, and apparently form part of, the chain of mountains (as they are called) in middle and south-western Texas.

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